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Mohammad Hatta, 1st Vice-President of Indonesia (1945-1956) Hamzah Haz, 9th Vice-President of Indonesia (2001-2004) Jusuf Kalla, 10th and 12th Vice-President of Indonesia (2004-2009 & 2014-2019) Adam Malik, 3rd Vice-President of Indonesia (1978-1983) Sudharmono, 5th Vice-President of Indonesia (1988-1993)
Fasting mimicking diet [13] Ian Marber: The Food Doctor [14] Judy Mazel: Beverly Hills Diet [15] Gillian McKeith: You Are What You Eat [16] Michel Montignac: Montignac diet [17] George Ohsawa: Macrobiotic diet [18] Henry Perky: Shredded wheat [19] Nathan Pritikin: Pritikin diet [20] Seth Roberts: The Shangri-La Diet [21] Barry Sears: Zone diet ...
Under President Suharto, Indonesia attempted to deconstruct organisations and groups that might represent an internal security threat. As a part of the policy to limit the influence of the Chinese Communists and to encourage the ethnic Chinese to assimilate, the state strongly encouraged Chinese Indonesian individuals to change their names.
Before Balitbangkes existed, the agency was preceded by four Health Laboratories under the Indonesian Department of Health formed in 1950-1960s, three were soon founded after the end of Indonesian National Revolution: Institute for People's Food in Bogor (researched human nutrition), Central Institute for Investigation and Eradication of Venereal Diseases in Surabaya (researched transmission ...
Directorate of Health Promotion and People Empowerment (Indonesian: Direktorat Promosi Kesehatan dan Pemberdayaan Masyarakat) Directorate of Nutrition and Mother and Child Health (Indonesian: Direktorat Gizi dan Kesehatan Ibu dan Anak) Directorate of Productive and Elderly Health (Indonesian: Direktorat Kesehatan Usia Produktif dan Lanjut Usia)
Jamu can be found throughout Indonesia; however, it is most prevalent in Java, where Mbok Jamu, the traditional kain kebaya-wearing young to middle-aged Javanese woman carrying bamboo basket, filled with bottles of jamu on her back, travelling villages and towns alleys, offering her fares of traditional herbal medicine, can be found. In many ...
As of 2020, Indonesians make up 3.4% of the world's total population and Indonesia is the fourth most populous country after China, India and the United States.. Despite a fairly effective family planning program that has been in place since the 1967, [54] for the decade ending in 2020, Indonesia's population growth was 1.1 percent.
The Sundanese language is spoken by approximately 36 million people in 2010 [9] and is the second most widely spoken regional language in Indonesia. [10] The 2000 Indonesia Census put this figure at 30.9 million.